The film of Kander and Ebb's "Chicago" continued to fare well at the box office during its seventh week in release.

The Rob Marshall-directed movie, which opened wide Feb. 8, brought in $10.7 million at the box office, according to Exhibitor Relations Co. Inc., making it the third highest-grossing film of the weekend. It was bested only by the Kate Hudson-Matthew McConaughey comedy "How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days" ($24.1 million) and the martial-arts action comedy "Shanghai Knights" ($19.8 million). Other films in the top ten included "The Recruit," "Final Destination 2," "Deliver Us from Eva," "Kangaroo Jack," "Biker Boyz," "Darkness Falls" and "Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers."

Now playing 1,841 screens, the Miramax motion picture "Chicago" has grossed $63.7 million to date. A spokesperson for Miramax confirmed that the Golden Globe Award-winning film will continue to open in additional movie houses over the next few weeks, playing 2,000 screens over the Valentine's Day weekend and 2,500 screens the weekend after that.

Starring Catherine Zeta-Jones, Renée Zellweger and Richard Gere, "Chicago" debuted in the top-20 markets Dec. 27 and then opened at 300 other screens Jan. 3. The much-in-the-news film had another limited expansion Jan. 17 — for a total of 557 screens — and a further expansion Jan. 24. This past weekend's wide release comes just a few days before this year's Oscar nominations: The 75th Anniversary Academy Award nominations will be announced Feb. 11, and it is expected that the movie musical will garner a slew of nominations.

The soundtrack (Epic Records) to the film is also doing well, having sold nearly 300,000 units.

Marshall, the choreographer of Broadway's Kiss of the Spider Woman and the revivals of Damn Yankees, She Loves Me, Cabaret and Little Me, directed the $45 million film, his motion-picture debut. Bill Condon wrote the "Chicago" screenplay for Miramax Studios, and the film's cinematographer was Dion Beebe. The Tony-winning lighting team of Jules Fisher and Peggy Eisenhauer lit the film.

John Kander and Fred Ebb's musical, which features such songs as "All That Jazz," "Mister Cellophane," "Class" and "Nowadays," debuted on Broadway in June 1975 with choreography by the late Bob Fosse and a cast led by Gwen Verdon, Chita Rivera and Jerry Orbach. The Tony-winning revival opened in November 1996 with Bebe Neuwirth, Ann Reinking, Joel Grey and James Naughton in the lead roles. Featuring direction by Walter Bobbie and choreography by Reinking "in the style of Bob Fosse," the musical satire recently reopened at the Ambassador Theatre Jan. 29 after a lengthy run at the Shubert.